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Stork Story
The Stork is now a sign of
these fertile times...
Once upon an obstetrician's
house call, the myth that the stork delivered babies into backyard
cabbage patches was just that: a myth.
These days, however, a hybrid creature part fact, part fancy-is
popping up all over the posher parts of the city and suburbs.
Landing on front walks, and looming in front yards, this
quasi-bird is giving grown-up credence to the silly childhood
notion.
Not surprisingly, the
creature occurs in only two shades, the obligatory pink and baby
blue. Stopping traffic and turning heads, wherever it appears,
wherever it lands, it is a stork: a 7 1/2 foot-tall, plywood
stork.
No longer is a five-line birth announcement in the Hinsdale Doings
or the Deerfield Review enough. This is the age of the baby
billboard. And these latex-painted creatures both advertise a
baby's name, weight and date of birth and laud the proud papa and
mama.
In the words of one
Washington, D.C., fertility specialist, the stork is but another
accouterment of today's "conspicuous conception"-an affliction
common among the millions of late-blooming baby boomers overjoyed
at finally disposing of six-figure incomes on their long-delayed
bundles.
The stork hardly stands alone in signaling the generation's tizzy
over its reproductive prowess. Other symptoms are the $1,000
imported Bellini crib, the $200 collapsible Apiica stroller and,
of course, the ubiquitous $1.95 "Baby on Board" car-window sign.
"These are the babies born to
parents in their 30's," said Ann Narcism, proprietor of Littlest
Offspring, a Hinsdale children's boutique. "These babies are
planned they don't just happen along. They are anxiously awaited.
People have more money at 35 than they do at 22, so they're saying
`what the hell.' and spending like crazy.
"The grandmas comes in and
say, 'I never thought I'd have a grandchild.' They're thrilled,"
Narcisi said. "They're the generation whose daughters decided to
become lawyers and then, at 37 or 39, got around to becoming moms.
They're the ones who want to have it all. Everything."
Indeed, one stork announcing
the April 6 arrival of 9-pound, 7-ounce Jaime Lynn Gongorek was
perched in the front lawn of a turn of-the-century
gingerbread-style house in Hinsdale whose driveway boasted two
station wagons-one a Volvo, the other a Mercedes-Benz.
Proud mother Denise Gongorek, 35, couldn't have been happier about
her front-yard bird. "I fell in love with it the second I saw an
ad for it at my obstetrician's office. I kept shuffling the flier
around the house for weeks, hoping my husband would get the hint."
He did. And just about the
time baby Jaime was feeling the confines of her very first diaper,
the hand lettered stork was proclaiming her arrival to all who
motored up and down the lane on which her parents live.
"We had people backing up and pulling into our driveway all week,"
Gongorek said, laughing. "Nothing like being on a busy street and
everybody knowing our business anyway. Every time we went anywhere
in town people were stopping us and asking about the stork."
At least a dozen
mothers-to-be in Hinsdale have penned their names onto a stork
waiting list. "This is a hot, hot, hot item," said Pam De Luca,
who, as manager of Littlest Offspring knows a big seller in the
baby market when she sees one. "They do spend the buckaroos where
their babies are concerned, don't they.?"
Although the Gongoreks' stork
actually arrived via a Naperville woman who paints the birds and
their baby bundles in her home, the whole flock migrated north
from Fayetteville , NC .
Stork News of America, Inc.
was founded there twenty three years ago by Cheryl Young, a homemaker who
decided she could make a bundle delivering homemade birth
announcements that 'would not be missed by passersby.
Naperville's Carleen Banks,
35, a nurse looking for a way to earn an income at home, caught
onto the concept last year while visiting Fayetteville when she
saw a story about the storks in a local paper.
Since February, just weeks
after delivering her own baby No.3, Banks has planted birds in
front lawns from St. Charles to Hinsdale . For $65 for five days,
Banks will perch a gender-appropriate stork wherever the proud
parents desire. Twins are a bargain at $100 a pair, Banks said. The
bird is picked-up after five days, but the parents get to keep the
stork's detachable bundle, on which the pertinent information has
been painted. "It saves on birth announcements," said Banks, ever
the saleswomen. "And it's cheaper than roses. Moms everywhere are
telling their husbands, "Don't send me flowers. Send me the
stork."' |
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General Information
Call between 9AM - 6PM EST (Mon-Fri),
Office: 910-426-1357
Fax: 910-426-2473
Email to
debbie@storknews.com
Franchise Information
Call between 9AM - 5PM EST (Mon-Fri),
Toll Free: 800-633-6395
Email
to
natalie@storknews.com
Call Daily 7AM to 6PM EST to order
Toll Free: 877-969-BABY(2229)
Corporate Information
Stork News of America, Inc.
1305 Hope Mills Road , Suite A
Fayetteville , NC 28304 |
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